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ella_2010

Applying more stain to doors

ella-2010
13 years ago

Hi everyone,

Would appreciate some advice.

If I want a stain on a door to be darker, should the next coat go on as soon as the first coat is dry or does the door need to be sanded down a little first?

Thanks in advance,

ella

Comments (6)

  • someone2010
    13 years ago

    I don't know what kind of door your talking about, or what finish is on it now, but a good way to darken a finish a bit is to use an aerosol toner.
    Others may have different methods.

  • ella-2010
    Original Author
    13 years ago

    Hi,

    Thanks for responding. The door is a maple veneer and originally had a dark stain (jacobean i think) and a poly finish. It was sanded, wiped and a coat of ebony stain put on it. Still not as dark as I would like though.

    ella

  • bobismyuncle
    13 years ago

    Stains are usually meant to go on bare wood, not already finished wood. The exception to this is a gel stain that when used this way becomes a glaze. There is a limit, though in how much darker you can go before the finish starts to look muddy and opaque. Glazing technique More

    Here is a link that might be useful: Glazing

  • ella-2010
    Original Author
    13 years ago

    Hi bobsmyuncle,

    Thank you so much for the link - very helpful indeed! I do believe that's what the builders will do ie glaze. They will then give it 3 coats of tung oil, as i understand it.

    Appreciate your help,
    ella

  • bobismyuncle
    13 years ago

    There is "true" tung oil, and there are 10 times as many things called "tung oil finish" that are not tung oil and do not contain any tung oil. Depending on the brand, they are either thinned varnish, AKA wiping varnish, or a (linseed) oil-varnish blend. Neither of these types are bad products, it's just not what you think they are if you read the label. Real tung oil is relatively expensive, hard to use successfully, and not appropriate for over-coating another finish.

    Here is a link that might be useful: Oil finishes and other misleading labels.

  • texasredhead
    13 years ago

    The OP still hasn't established whether this is an interior or exterior door. I think that will have a bearing on the type of stain and finish.

    Consering tung oil, I have restored finishes on antiques where I have removed the finish but retained the patina followed by several hand rubbed coats of tung oils. It produces a very firm durable finish. BTW, I use Old Masters brand tung oil.